RealityChuck Old-Timey Member Posted March 14, 2011 Posted March 14, 2011 (might only display for a few days).
MFS62 Old-Timey Member Posted March 14, 2011 Posted March 14, 2011 I miss that strip in my local paper.It was one of my favorites.Later
RealityChuck Old-Timey Member Posted March 14, 2011 Author Posted March 14, 2011 MFS62 wrote:I miss that strip in my local paper.It was one of my favorites.LaterIt's online at http://www.gocomics.com/tankmcnamara
G-Fafif Old-Timey Member Posted March 14, 2011 Posted March 14, 2011 Tank I kept taped to the wall next to my bed for several years of my adolescence:One black ballplayer to another black ballplayer: "That's COLD, baby!"Uptight white veteran ballplayer: "You think it's cold now, Willie, you should wait 'til we get to Montreal."Tank to the two two horrified-looking black ballplayers: "You'll have to forgive Joe. He doesn't learn the new slang until May."I think the strip peaked right around then.
Frayed Knot Old-Timey Member Posted March 14, 2011 Posted March 14, 2011 Yeah, the only 'Scroogie' cartoon I remember was just like that one. In it a white ballplayer arrives at ST and sees (out of the box) two presumably black players saying hello amid sound effects of: SMACK, SLAP, BANG, BUMP, etc., before saying; 'Ten years in the big leagues and I still don't understand the handshakes'.
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted March 15, 2011 Posted March 15, 2011 I can't get over the idea that that looks like a tumbleweed that might have appeared in Peanuts, perhaps in one of the Spike-in-Needles stips.I guess there's no chance that Schulz used an inker that's now working on MacNamara, is there?
RealityChuck Old-Timey Member Posted March 15, 2011 Author Posted March 15, 2011 Schulz always insisted on doing all the work himself.
Guest LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr Guests Posted March 16, 2011 Posted March 16, 2011 "Get A Laugh" has never seemed more imperative.
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted March 17, 2011 Posted March 17, 2011 Benjamin Grimm wrote:Like Cathy!See, that's the deal with Cathy to me. I thought Cathy Guisewite more or less did a good job keeping the strip running on her small bag of recurring themes, and providing in the punchlines new angles on old themes. But the wordy build-ups to the punchlines, with no incidental humor along the way, made you do more work than the punchline was worth. It's not that I'm too lazy to read. It's just that humor needs rhythm.At least Tank gets two gags in here along the way. I actually thought the first was funnier.
Benjamin Grimm Old-Timey Member Posted March 17, 2011 Posted March 17, 2011 Edgy DC wrote:But the wordy build-ups to the punchlines, with no incidental humor along the way, made you do more work than the punchline was worth. It's not that I'm too lazy to read. It's just that humor needs rhythm.Absolutely.
G-Fafif Old-Timey Member Posted March 18, 2011 Posted March 18, 2011 Filling in for Chuck with the "laugh" of the day.I figured Mr. Delta Club's financial savvy was implied by his going to Citi Field's multiple ticket windows, as gorgeously illustrated in Monday's strip, thus saving on extraneous fees. But the Mets, those bastards, they got him, too.Or as Tank put it in 1978, "That's COLD, baby!"
G-Fafif Old-Timey Member Posted March 21, 2011 Posted March 21, 2011 Finishing the arc, with quite possibly the first comic strip pages appearances of Fred Wilpon.
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted March 21, 2011 Posted March 21, 2011 They do the word baloons by hand but computer font the sign.
Benjamin Grimm Old-Timey Member Posted March 21, 2011 Posted March 21, 2011 The word balloons are a font, too. (I think most cartoonists these days use a handwritten font for their lettering.) Take a look at the E's... they're all identical.
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted March 21, 2011 Posted March 21, 2011 You're right!It loked hand lettered to me initially, but close inspection showed me the S's were all the same.It's different from most standard word ballon fonts these days and a little scratchy for computer work. Maybe it's computer generated but inked over? Or maybe an inked-over alphabet got saved as a font by the strip's makers for their use alone?
Benjamin Grimm Old-Timey Member Posted March 21, 2011 Posted March 21, 2011 I think the cartoonist creates a font (or, more likely, has one created for him) out of his own hand lettering.
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted March 21, 2011 Posted March 21, 2011 I imagine many do that. Others, I know, just go with comic sans.
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